Montezuma County Sheriff Dennis Spruell talks to Delta County Sheriff Fred McKee after a news conference announcing a lawsuit against Gov. John Hickenlooper for signing two gun bills in Denver on Friday, May 17, at the Independence Institute, a conservative think tank that is sponsoring the lawsuit.

DENVER – Montezuma County Sheriff Dennis Spruell stood with 17 other uniformed sheriffs Friday in a packed lobby of a Denver office building to announce a Second Amendment lawsuit against Gov. John Hickenlooper.

The sheriffs, plus 36 other sheriffs who didn’t attend the announcement and several other plaintiffs, claim that two gun bills Hickenlooper signed in March are unconstitutional.

The bills require background checks for private gun sales and ban the sale of ammunition magazines that hold more than 15 rounds. Plaintiffs say they violate the Second and 14th Amendments to the Constitution.

The sheriffs’ overall argument is that the bills criminalize the ownership of common guns and routine behavior, like handing a gun to a friend.

“My constituents feel their Second Amendment rights are being trampled on,” Spruell said.

He attended a news conference at the Independence Institute in Denver on Friday morning. Independence Institute researcher Dave Kopel will be the lead attorney in the case. Kopel served as an expert witness to Congress and the state Legislature against gun bills this year.

Spruell said he was in Denver on other business and did not spend county money on the trip. He and La Plata County Sheriff Duke Schirard – also a plaintiff – both said taxpayer money is not being used for the lawsuit.

Several other plaintiffs joined the suit, including gun manufacturers, disabled gun owners and gun merchants, including Durango’s Goods for the Woods. The Durango store has a current inventory of guns that will become illegal to sell when the laws take effect July 1, according to the suit.

Several parts of the new laws are troublesome, Kopel said. The magazine ban applies not only to magazines larger than 15 rounds, but also smaller ones that are designed to be readily converted to a larger size. That includes most magazines because they usually have a removable baseplate.

Attorney General John Suthers sent out “guidance” to police around the state Friday on how the law should be enforced. The memo says a magazine shouldn’t be treated as high-capacity simply because it has a removable baseplate.

However, plaintiffs said such guidance is legally meaningless, and they want the law overturned.

The background check law requires private sellers to use a licensed gun dealer to see if their buyers are eligible. But with a $10 limit on background check fees, Kopel doubted if any gun dealers would be willing to do the work and assume the legal risk.

Several people who lost loved ones to shootings sent out statements decrying the lawsuit, including Dave Hoover, a Denver-area police officer. Hoover’s nephew, AJ Boik, was killed in the Aurora movie theater massacre.

“It is disappointing to see the majority of sheriffs in this state turn gun safety and the safety of families and citizens of this state into a political issue. These laws are supported by a majority of Coloradans because they protect public safety while respecting responsible gun ownership. Let’s encourage the sheriffs to focus on public safety and enforce the laws they have sworn to uphold, instead of playing politics,” Hoover said.

Spruell, however, said a better strategy would be to enforce the many gun laws already on the books.

“The new laws that they’re putting in have absolutely no effect on gun violence,” Spruell said.

Suthers said his office would defend the lawsuit, although he issued a statement that was far short of zealous support for the new laws.

“In defending the lawsuit as counsel for the state, the objective of the Attorney General’s Office will be to get court rulings on the legality of various aspects of the legislation as expeditiously as possible. Colorado citizens, and law-abiding gun owners in particular, deserve such clarification,” Suthers’ statement said.

All the sheriffs from Southwest Colorado’s five counties – Montezuma, Dolores, La Plata, Archuleta and San Juan – joined the suit. It was filed in U.S. District Court in Denver.

Sheriffs in all but 10 of the state’s 64 counties signed up as plaintiffs. The sheriffs who did not join were from San Miguel, Grand, Eagle, Pueblo, Chaffee, Conejos, Boulder and Pitkin counties, plus the city-counties of Broomfield and Denver.